Three misuses of dionysius for comparative theology

Religious Studies 45 (2):205-221 (2009)
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Abstract

In his 2000 Religious Studies article 'Ineffability', John Hick calls upon the Dionysian corpus to bear witness to the 'transcategorality' of God and thereby corroborate his comparative theology of pluralism. Hick's Dionysius avows God's transcendence of categories by negating God's names, while at the same time maintaining that such names are metaphorically useful means of uplifting humans to God. But herein reside three common misunderstandings of the Dionysian corpus: (1) the divine names are mere metaphors; (2) the divine names are therefore negated of God; and (3) the negation of divine names is the means by which humans return to and unite with God

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Tim Knepper
Drake University

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Ineffability.John Hick - 2000 - Religious Studies 36 (1):35-46.
Theurgy in Proclus and Pseudo-Dionysius.Sarah Klitenic - 2001 - Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society:85-95.

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